753.16
City or district workhouse may receive prisoners from other counties - agreements - reimbursement by prisoner - medical testing or treatment.

(A)
Any city or
district having a workhouse may receive as inmates of the workhouse persons
sentenced or committed to it from counties other than the one in which the
workhouse is situated, upon the terms and during the length of time agreed upon
by the boards of county commissioners of those counties, or by the legislative
authority of a municipal corporation in those counties and the legislative
authority of the city, or the board of the district workhouse, or other
authority having the management and control of the workhouse. Prisoners so
received shall in all respects be and remain under the control of that
authority, and shall be subject to the rules and discipline of the workhouse to
which the other prisoners detained in the workhouse are subject.

(B)
Prior to the acceptance for housing into
a jail or workhouse of persons who are designated by the department of
rehabilitation and correction, who plead guilty to or are convicted of a felony
of the fourth or fifth degree, and who satisfy the other requirements listed in
section 5120.161 of the Revised Code, the
legislative authority of a municipal corporation having a jail or workhouse, or
the joint board managing and controlling a workhouse for the joint use of a
municipal corporation and a county shall enter into an agreement with the
department of rehabilitation and correction under section
5120.161 of the Revised Code for
the housing in the jail or workhouse of persons who are designated by the
department, who plead guilty to or are convicted of a felony of the fourth or
fifth degree, and who satisfy the other requirements listed in that section, in
exchange for a per diem fee per person. Persons incarcerated in the jail or
workhouse pursuant to an agreement of that nature shall be subject to
supervision and control in the manner described in section
5120.161 of the Revised Code. This
division does not affect the authority of a court to directly sentence a person
who is convicted of or pleads guilty to a felony to the jail or workhouse in
accordance with section
2929.16 of the Revised Code.

(C)
Pursuant to section
2929.37 of the Revised Code, the
board of county commissioners, the legislative authority of the municipal
corporation, or the board or other managing authority of the district workhouse
may require a person who was convicted of an offense and who is confined in the
workhouse as provided in division (A) of this section, to reimburse the county,
municipal corporation, or district, as the case may be, for its expenses
incurred by reason of the person's confinement.

(D)
Notwithstanding any contrary provision in
this section or section
2929.18,
2929.28, or
2929.37 of the Revised Code, the
board of county commissioners, the legislative authority of a municipal
corporation, or the board or other managing authority of the district workhouse
may establish a policy that complies with section
2929.38 of the Revised Code and
that requires any person who is not indigent and who is confined in the jail or
workhouse under division (A) or (B) of this section to pay a reception fee, a
fee for any medical treatment or service requested by and provided to that
person, or the fee for a random drug test assessed under division (E) of
section 753.33 of the Revised Code.

(E)
If a person who has been
convicted of or pleaded guilty to an offense is confined in the workhouse as
provided in division (A) of this section or is incarcerated in the workhouse in
the manner described in division (B) of this section, or if a person who has
been arrested for an offense, and who has been denied bail or has had bail set
and has not been released on bail is confined in the workhouse pending trial,
at the time of reception and at other times the person in charge of the
operation of the workhouse determines to be appropriate, the person in charge
of the operation of the workhouse may cause the convicted or accused offender
to be examined and tested for tuberculosis, HIV infection, hepatitis, including
but not limited to hepatitis A, B, and C, and other contagious diseases. The
person in charge of the operation of the workhouse may cause a convicted or
accused offender in the workhouse who refuses to be tested or treated for
tuberculosis, HIV infection, hepatitis, including but not limited to hepatitis
A, B, and C, or another contagious disease to be tested and treated
involuntarily.